Syrian army and opposition agree to
a truce in Zabadani
After
a reported two days of negotiating, Syrian regime forces and the opposition agreed to a
ceasefire in the town of Zabadani, 19 miles north of Damascus, near
Lebanon's border. The town has been a frequent site of large demonstrations and
was attacked on Friday by troops and tanks in one of the biggest strikes since
the beginning of the Arab League's observer mission in Syria. The ceasefire was brokered
between President Bashar al-Assad's brother-in-law, Deputy Defense Minister
Assef Shawkat, and town leaders. According to senior opposition leader, Kamal al-Labwani,
the deal was sparked by "stiff resistance and defections among the attacking
forces." However, one resident reported to the Associated Press that the Syrian
army had broken
the truce and resumed shelling. Meanwhile, the Arab
League is debating continuing its operations in Syria after Assad said he
would permit the mission to extend for a month. In a meeting with Jordanian
King Abdullah II, U.S. President
Barack Obama again called for Assad's regime to step down, saying there
were "unacceptable levels of violence" in Syria.
Headlines
- Egyptian Field Marshal Tantawi
has warned of "grave
dangers" as the military
plans for January 25 anniversary protests calling for a transfer to
civilian rule.
- Israeli air
forces and tanks attacked Palestinian men in Gaza suspected of
planting a bomb along the Israeli border, killing one and wounding three.
- Gunmen killed an Iraqi Sunni
village chief and three of his sons who were part of the Sawha, the Awakening
Council, that cooperated with the U.S. army to fight al-Qaeda linked
militants.
- Hamas political
leader Khaled
Meshaal said he will step down during upcoming elections after
proposing a change in direction to non-violent resistance.
- A hearing for Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman began Tuesday over fraud and corruption charges.
Daily Snapshot
Tribal gunmen loyal to dissident tribal chief Sadiq al-Ahmar
inspect the damage in a burnt out building as they withdraw from key
government sites under the agreed security plan in the capital Sanaa, on
January 17, 2012. The building was damaged during fighting last year
between tribes men loyal to al-Ahmar and those soldiers loyal to
President Ali Abdullah Saleh (MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP/Getty Images).
Arguments & Analysis
'Bahrain's Sunni Awakening' (Justin Gengler, Middle East Report online)
"There are signs that the social forces unleashed by the uprising, and
the wider Arab awakening, have made Bahraini Sunnis more cognizant of
their perennial position as political counterweight -- and more
resistant to it. The same grassroots movements that rose in defense of
the regime in February and March are now daring to articulate reform
demands of their own, albeit not yet with a coherent purpose. Ever since
the days when the Iranian revolution threatened to inundate the Arab
Gulf with Islamic populism, Bahrain's rulers have raised that specter to
win the reflexive support of ordinary Sunnis and to diffuse citizen
pressure for a political opening. Ironically, it may be an upheaval
initiated by Bahraini Shi‘a that hastens the end of this arrangement."
'Cairo loses its voice' (Mike Giglio, The Daily Beast)
"Once the revolution took hold, everyone from poets to punk rockers
flocked to the cause. Egyptian graffiti gained global fame, and museums
put together showcases of revolutionary art. The most popular song of
the protest movement came from a struggling acoustic guitarist named
Ramy Essam. He wrote the compilation of popular chants and some
improvised lines in a few minutes from inside Tahrir. Banning Eyre, the
music journalist who runs the radio series Afropop Worldwide, says
the time was ripe for what he calls "people power" music. "You could
record a song that was an expression of being free," he says. "It felt
right.""
'Iran is finding fewer buyers for its oil' (David Ignatius, Washington Post)
"The squeeze is already beginning on Iran's oil exports - and
guess which nation quietly reduced its purchases from Tehran this month.
Why, that would be China, Iran's supposed protector. The Chinese cut their imports from Iran roughly in half for
January, trimming 285,000 barrels per day from their average last year
of about 550,000 barrels per day, according to Nat Kern, the publisher
of Foreign Reports, a respected industry newsletter. Iran's reduced sales to its biggest oil customer resulted from a dispute
over payment terms, Kern explains. But it's an early sign of what may
be significant reductions in Iranian exports to Europe and Asia, as
buyers there hedge against the likelihood of tighter sanctions."
Latest from the Channel
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-- 'The Iraqi revolution we'll never know' by Michael Wahid Hanna
--Mary Casey and Tom Kutsch
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